Health, Behavior, and the Community: An Ecological Perspective |
Contents
Chapter | 1 |
The Biological Basis of the Ecological Paradigm | 13 |
Chapter 3 | 28 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
abiotic elements abnormal behavior analogy analysis anxiety assumed atavism B. F. Skinner basic assumptions become behavioral problems Burgess cacti central city century chapter Chicago School concept cost of friction craftsmen crime criminal behavior criminology delinquency described differential association disciplinary matrix disease division of labor dominant ecological gradient ecological paradigm ecological perspective ecologists economic base ecosystem environment environmental epistemology Ernest Burgess example Exemplars exhibit explanation factors Freudian function gangs germ paradigm Haig health and behavioral health problems highest and best human community human ecologists hypotheses illness included increased individual industrial labeled land Lombroso measures metropolitan areas Metropolitan Statistical Areas microbes migrants moral atavism move normal science organic paradigm pattern physical physicians population precipitated predicted production psychology public health rates role schizophrenia social contract social costs society stress theory tion town trophic organization urban zone in transition